Affiliation:
1. From the MediCity Research Laboratory, University of Turku, and National Public Health Institute, Department in Turku, Turku, Finland.
Abstract
Abstract
—Lymphocyte binding to vascular endothelium is a prerequisite for the movement of immune cells from the blood into lymphoid tissues and into sites of inflammation. Human vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1) is an endothelial glycoprotein involved in this interaction. It also displays an enzymatic (monoamine oxidase) activity. Here we examined how recombinant human VAP-1 mediates lymphocyte binding using rotatory and flow chamber binding assays. VAP-1 cDNA transfected into an endothelial cell line, which does not bind lymphocytes, renders the cell line capable of binding lymphocytes in a shear-dependent manner. VAP-1 transfectants bound lymphocytes 5 times better than monocytes with a preference for T killer cells, and no specific granulocyte adherence was detectable. The binding is partially inhibited by anti–VAP-1 monoclonal antibodies or by blocking lymphocyte L-selectin and CD18 integrins, but not by inhibition of several other homing-associated molecules. In contrast, CD44 ligation on lymphocytes markedly upregulates their VAP-1–dependent adhesion, suggesting that the VAP-1 counterreceptor can be activated via CD44. The transfectant model also allowed us to perform detailed structure-function analyses of VAP-1. We show that the exposed integrin-binding motif RGD or the enzymatic activity is not indispensable for VAP-1–dependent adhesion. Together, these data show that VAP-1 can reconstitute the lymphocyte-endothelial adhesion cascade under shear and propose a critical role for VAP-1 in lymphocyte emigration from the blood.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
41 articles.
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